What is brand experience and
experiential branding?
Brand experience can be thought of as sensations,
feelings, perceptions, and behavioral responses evoked by brand-related
stimuli. The more powerful the experience is, the stronger the brand
impression. Brand experience also affects consumer satisfaction and
loyalty; it allows the brand to sell products at a premium and to
create competitive entry barriers.
Experiential branding is a process by which brands
create and drive sensory interactions with consumers in all aspects of
the brand experience to emotionally influence their preferences and to
actively shape their perceptions of the brand. Interactions involve
communication, brand space, and product and service elements. These
elements work together to affect brand equity.
How does brand experience build
brand equity?
The combination of all interactions with
communication, brand space, and product and service elements, make up a
customer’s brand experience. The customer will then form a brand
evaluation and perception based on these interactions. This is what
builds brand equity in the consumer’s mind, and it is composed of four
key dimensions: differentiation, relevance, esteem and knowledge.
Various experiential branding methods impact different dimensions of
brand equity, which must be carefully considered by marketers or brand
managers when utilizing these methods.
In this article we will discuss the four
dimensions of brand equity, and provide specific examples of
experiential branding for each one, in order to discover how this
creative branding activity can be used successfully.
Differentiation: Perceived
distinctiveness of the brand
Differentiation is a brand’s ability to stand
apart from others, and to gain consumer choice, preference and loyalty.
It is the degree to which consumers find a brand unique. A compelling
and memorable brand experience can attract customers’ attention and
maintain their interest, and therefore contribute to brand
differentiation.
In recent years, companies like Nokia, Apple,
Barbie, and Gucci have opened flagship stores in China to provide more
consumer-brand interaction opportunities. The newly-built Barbie Store
in Shanghai is a 6-floor megastore with a spa, design center, café and
interactive activities designed for girls. It became a hot spot in
Shanghai very quickly, with thousands of girls now visiting the store
every day. The branded experiences provided by the Barbie store will
undoubtedly serve to differentiate the brand from others.
Flagship stores are one way that companies can connect and interact
with customers to participate in experiential branding. They are also
places to display limited edition products and unique service
experiences, which can communicate the companies’ culture and brand
values in ways traditional media cannot.
Relevance: Personal appropriateness
of the brand
Relevance refers to how meaningful a brand is to
their target consumers. Relevant brands are both appropriate and
appealing. Niche and growing brands may choose to focus first on
differentiation and then on relevance, whereas leading brands will
excel on all four dimensions.
Adidas Brand Center in Beijing is both
experiential and meaningful for customers, so it contributes to brand
relevance. The retail center features a range of interactive zones
including miCoach Core Skills, the recently launched miOriginals, mi
Adidas, a juice bar, a dedicated 'Urban' area for exhibitions and
events, a basketball court on the rooftop, a Concierge Desk and a
children’s area. As you can see, there are products and interactions
offered for Adidas’ various targeted market segments, ensuring that the
customer’s experiences of the Adidas brand are highly relevant.
Esteem: Regard for the brand
Esteem measures the degree to which the target
audiences regard and respect a brand—in short, how well it is liked.
When companies grow larger and become more mature, brand esteem becomes
more and more important. Today, companies often use indirect
experiential branding methods to build brand esteem. One way to do this
is through the Internet and social networking websites.
With the recent popularity of social networking
services (SNS) such as Facebook, Twitter, Kaixin001, Renren, and many
more, forward-thinking companies place their brand inconspicuously in
the pages, games, and posts, of these sites. SNS websites are a new
media which stimulate increased interaction with users. In the first
half of 2009, Kaixin001 became China’s most popular SNS with over 83
million registered. Brands, media agencies, and organizations have used
different approaches to connect with the community and target its
netizens. An impressive and representative case is Lohas juice. It
successfully promoted its brand in the popular SNS game “Kaixin
Garden”. Through this interactive game, the juice brand not only
promotes its products, but also portrays a lifestyle and an attitude
which influences the customers’ brand perception.
Knowledge: Understanding of What the
Brand Stands For
Knowledge determines whether there is a true
understanding of what a brand stands for. Brand awareness is a
sub-component of knowledge. The level of brand knowledge is a signal of
the company’s past performance, as well as a foundation for its further
development. Positive and accurate understanding of the brand amongst
target consumers results in brand loyalty. However, it is not enough
for a brand to tell consumers what their brand means, they have to show
them, and what better way to do this than through brand experience.
This is what Nokia is doing with its global
customer service and experience center in Shanghai, which opened in
August, 2009. The center provides hardware repair and software services
to users of its mobile phones. The Shanghai experience center is a
place for customers to learn more about their Nokia cellphones and
experience what Nokia brand stands for. Helping their customers develop
a deep and comprehensive understanding of their company will help Nokia
consolidate their customer loyalty and brand equity.
Conclusion
As mentioned above, experiential branding, a
creative branding process through customer experience, contributes to
brand differentiation, esteem, relevance, and knowledge, and therefore
is an effective way to build brands. Through interactive technologies,
innovative retail spaces, and indirect online brand communication
methods, consumers can now see, touch, hear, taste, and smell brands in
ways they never could before. Flashy advertising and price-slashing
product promotions are often not sustainable methods for brand
building. Experiential branding, with the objective of building brand
equity, has emerged as a promising and viable alternative.
Create a unique brand experience for
your target consumers, info@labbrand.com.
Sources:
http://www.abnnewswire.net/press/en/53962/Worldapos;s_Largest_Adidas_Sto...
http://www.wikio.com/article/121205473
http://www.slideshare.net/CIC_China/cic-iwom-watch-1st-half-year-review-2046419
Josko Brakus, J., Schmitt, B.H.,
& Zarantonello, L. (2009). Brand Experience. Journal of
Marketing, 73, 52-68.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/branding-articles/
experiential-branding-using-5-senses-to-build-brand-equity-1702925.html About the Author
Vladimir Djurovic is the founder and Managing
Director of Labbrand, a Shanghai based innovative brand agency
specialized in brand research, strategic and creative services.
Labbrand website at: http://labbrand.com/
is also the portal to Labbrand branding blog:
http://labbrand.com/english/news_and_articles.php/
and reviews of branding related hot topics, with a special focus on
China. |